NO. 1976. TREE8HREWS: FAMILY TUPAIID^—LYON. 169 



Cantor, T. Catalogue of Mammalia inhabiting the Malayan Peninsula and Islands. 

 Journ. Asiat. Soc. Bengal, vol. 15, 1846, pp. 188-190. 



Remarks on habits, young, mamma;, and cecum (| in. long) of Twpaia. 



Carus, J. V. Handbuch der Zoologie, 1868-75, p. 89. 



Brief account of Twpajx; Cladobates, Dendrogale, Ptilocercus, Hylomys. 



Chapman, Henry C. Observations on Tupaia, with reflections on the origin ot 

 Primates. Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1904, pp. 148-156. 



Observations on the anatomy of cecum, stomach, and liver of Tupaia fcrruginea and T. pictum. 

 Cecum said to be absent. 



CuviER, Frederic. Des Dents des Mammiferes consid^rees comme caracteres 

 zoologiques, pp. i-lv, and 1-259, pis. 1-103, 1825. 



First use of the term Cladobates, pp. 60-61, and descriptions, and illustrations of teetli of [ Cladobates] 

 tana, ferruginea, javanica. 



. Table G^nerale et M^thodique at end of Hist. Nat. Mamm., vol. 7, dated 



1842. 



106 Cerp ou Banxring {Cladobates javanica), 107 Press {Cladobates ferruginea). 



CuviER, Georges. Regne Animal, vol. 1, 1829, pp. 125-126. 



The genus Cladobates or Tupaia briefly mentioned with the included species jat)a«fca, tana, ferruginea, 



. Legons d'Anatomie Compar^e, ed. 2, vol. 2, 1837. 



In article on osteology of the skull much scattered information regarding Cladobates. 



Dallas, W. S. Insectivora. Cassel's Natural History, vol. 1 (1880?). 



A compiled account of the family; genera: Tupaia, Dendrogale, Ptilocercus, Hylomys (sic), pp 347- 

 350. Woodcut of Tana chrysura after Giinther. 



Desmarest, a. G. Mammalogie ou Description des Espfeces de Mammiferes, vol. 2, 

 supplement, 1822, pp. 535-536. 



Proposes the generic name Glisorex, but adopts Tupaia: T. tana , javanica, ferruginea. 



Dlard. Report of a meeting of the Asiatic Society of Bengal for March 10, 1820. 

 Asiat. Journ. Month. Reg., vol. 10, pp. 477^78, November, 1820. 



The first published account of a treeshrew and original description oiSorex glis (= Tupaia glis glis) 

 from Penang. 



DiARD and Duvaucel. On the Sorex Glis, communicated by Major General Hard- 

 wicke. Notice. — Sur une nouvelle espece de Sorex. — Sorex Glis. Asiat. Res., 

 vol. 14, 1822, p. 472, pi. 9. 



a republication of the preceding article. 



DoRAN, Alban H. G. Moi-phology of the Mammalian Ossicula auditiis. Trans. 

 Linn. Soc. London, ser. 2, vol. 1, 1879, August, 1878, pp. 371-197, pis. 58-64. 



On p. 441 and following, description of auditory ossicles of Tupaia, and illustrated on pi. 62, fig. 17. 



Elera, Castro de. Catalogo Sistemdtica de toda la Fauna de Filipinas, etc., vol. 

 1, 1895, p. 17. 



Tupaia ferruginea recorded from Culion (probably= T. mollendorffi), Paragua (probably= T. pala- 

 wanensis), Java, Sumatra, Borneo, Singapore, Malacca; and T. javanica from Calamianes, Culion (prob- 

 ably= T. mollendorffi, Paragua (probably= T. palawanensis), Borneo, Java, Sumatra. 



Elliot, Daniel Girard. A Catalogue of the Collection of ilammals m the Field 

 Columbian Museum. Field Columbian Museum, Pub. No. 115, Zool. Ser., vol. 8, 

 1907. 



On p. 464, Tupaia tana, one specimen from "Sumatra." 



Ellis, William. Manuscript Journal and drawings of animals observed during Capt. 

 Cook's third voyage, 1780. In Library of British Museum (Natural History). 



Description and colored illustration of Tupaia dissimilis. The description published by Gray, Ann. 

 Mag. Nat. Hist., ser. 3, vol. 5, 1860, p. 71. A copy of Ellis's colored drawing forms Plate 1 ot this paper. 



. Voyage of Capt. Cook and Capt. Clerke in Ships Resolution and Discovery, 



1776, 1777, 1778, 1779, and 1780, published 1782. 



On page 340 of vol. 2 the treeshrews of Pulo Condore are referred to as squirrels 



